Welcome to the Shroomery Message Board! You are experiencing a small sample of what the site has to offer. Please login or register to post messages and view our exclusive members-only content. You'll gain access to additional forums, file attachments, board customizations, encrypted private messages, and much more!

What do you think are the best drug books? I did not like Naked Lunch or Fear and Loathing but I did like Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test and Doors of Perception.

--------------------What is this? It is a prolate spheroid, an elongated sphere in which the outer leather casing is drawn tightly over a somewhat smaller rubber tubing. Better to have died as a small boy than to fumble this football.

-John Heisman

"I didn’t dive on one fumble because the way my leg was (positioned)," Newton told reporters in Charlotte on Tuesday. "It could have been contorted in a way. You say my effort? I didn’t dive down. I fumbled - that’s fine. That’s fine. We didn’t lose the game because of that fumble.”

also food of the gods, by terrance mckenna. anything by timothy leary (although his style is a bit odd, to say the least). the varieties of the mystical experience by william james (not really about drugs except for in some few passages, but good nonetheless!). zig zag zen - a big collection of essays about psychedelics and buddhism (plus filled with great artwork).. all i can think of right now, but there are many many more!

Thinking about this has made me remember a book I read in junior high called Go Ask Alice. I was just reading about it on Amazon. It's considered very dishonest anti-drug propaganda by many but the weird thing is I remember the book actually made me want to try LSD. It's a (probably fake) diary from a teenage girl who gets slipped an acid mickey at a party. I remember her description of the LSD experience was really cool (or at least in seemed cool to me when I was 13). Even though it's been decades I still remember her saying something like, 'It came up inside me like a storm'. Sounds corny and cliche now I guess but the imagery was really thought provoking to me back then.

--------------------What is this? It is a prolate spheroid, an elongated sphere in which the outer leather casing is drawn tightly over a somewhat smaller rubber tubing. Better to have died as a small boy than to fumble this football.

-John Heisman

"I didn’t dive on one fumble because the way my leg was (positioned)," Newton told reporters in Charlotte on Tuesday. "It could have been contorted in a way. You say my effort? I didn’t dive down. I fumbled - that’s fine. That’s fine. We didn’t lose the game because of that fumble.”